Monday, September 26, 2011

I was called at the town office by the Clay factory manager mid day Friday. She handed the phone to Dickson, the mason building the large groin ed vault.

"Can you come by as there is a crack !, there is no immediate danger but serious." It was hard to understand from his explanation.

My immediate thoughts while I am riding my bicycle to the factory:- I have to scrap this whole idea and make a boring roof like my neighbor. -It is just too complicated. -I envision it will have all fallen down by the time I get there.-I am now waiting for "I told you so, this wont work"-I am way out of my level.

Arriving, from outside on the ground it all looks normal......

What I see when I go up the stairs to the first floor is a separation of arches on two vaults. three arches have split apart on two of the vaultsIn one groin corner at the bottom there are some cracks in the groin bricks .

And from the other side.The stretcher third row from bottom shows a brick that must of failed and sank, then ones above cracked.

My immediate thought is "Is it going to fall right now?Why?

I have learned a lot in the past few hours and will learn more in the next week. In summary, a groin ed vault is not as forgiving a vault, and you better make very sure that the groin pieces are touching completely on the next piece. In the end it is good it happened now, and what we learned is big. Yes it is true, we don't know what we are doing, but we are "finding a lost art" reinventing the wheel. I could find no real detail on how to cut the groin bricks. Hopefully what I learn can be used by others.

I inspected and inspected and we made several mistakes .

1-The arches separated because one brick failed in a groin, when it failed the bricks above and below also failed / cracked.

2-This groin (below) was the first one we built. By the third corner were doing it in a good way. I am embarrassed by below picture, but it needs to be shown. We didn't know what we were doing, had no idea how to do it. I should of tore it down, except it taught us a lot. We should of torn it down, as we had been experimenting. 3- In my planning I thought we needed a non standard brick 10cm thick instead of 7cm. My thinking was as it would be cut it could become weaker. The problem as it was a non standard brick it was made differently and not burnt as well. they were weaker bricks than the thinner ones because not made by slop method but rammed in a press and not burnt well. visual inspection shows it has more cracks in it than a normal brick.

4- The brick was cut top and bottom trying to get them to overlap. it should of been only cut on the top. (by the second corner we had stopped that.)

5- Not all bricks lay perfectly flat on the brick below, so there was a pressure point and it snapped the brick. It is really important that the load bearing part of brick is touching the whole length or width.

6- the bricks in the groin in the bottom 2 meters should be over burnt (stronger)

The groin pieces in the lower third have to:-be clinkers in the corner-and cut precisely-lye completely flat on mortar-extend out past the groin-no sharp edges of bricks resting on a brick. flat against flat.

After some hours I am able to say, it is a good lesson, we learned a lot, but pay more attention to what is going to happen in the groin.

Loading now with the rest of the bricks, I have put enough bricks on the top to simulate the weight of the remaining bricks that need to be placed. I want to see what happens. (note: it had no problems in the good groins.)

In the end it makes me respect the arch even more. It holds up even when there was a failure.

What follows is too many pictures but I post for historical reasons (Inevitably my hard drive will crash and the back up hard drive before i make another backup)

Eventually it was better:Here we tried cutting each at a 45 degree angle, and then again sloping at same angle as the other. this meant cutting two bricks each groin, and the bricks became quite small, and no overlapping bond. You see in the last 6 courses we went to cutting one brick only, the other is completely whole, and there is an overlapping bond now.More pictures of the failure, this from outside

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Call me a snob, but if you are going to spend all this money, why can't an architecht do something more interesting. And why the cast concrete over verandas?

From my house down to the new house I pass this house. It is visible from my front garden. After 25 years of living without another house close by those days are gone. And in between this house and my garden someone has bought that plot and will put up another house.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

We have made some progress. the groins are over 2m high now and each vault coming in is a bit over a meter from the inside wall. Those bricks sticking out will be cut shorter and most likely left as "stairs" for accessing the roof top.

Another cornor from on top of a flat roof that will be veranda. The board with the small arch was experiment to see if we could start arches sticking to wood. You can.

Inside with all the scaffolding making it hard to see.This is a wild picture from the floor looking up along a groin. It appears like the groin is a straight line, but it curves. And the bricks standing up appear to curve. Wild.

I did live through the 60's albeit just barely as a teenager, so i have to do some funky wine bottles in the ceiling.

Sorry more shots.

The man Dickson putting in groin pieces. He says we can't do this contract, as he might try to build to fast.Recall the picture looking up the groin from the floor, well here is proof the groin is a parabola.these are from a week ago. Note the scaffolding!A better idea what it will look like from outside.

About Me

I grew up (?) in Washington State, USA. Moved to Tanzania right after college (1977) and when my parents left Tanzania I was left behind. Currently I run an ISP but would rather be biking or building a house.